Background: This study was designed to evaluate the current situation of interhospital transport of pediatric patients requiring emergent care.
Methods: Using a clinical prospective and multicenter design, 1,666 interhospital transports of pediatric patients were evaluated in 18 centers. Non-emergency transports and newborn transports were not included, so 854 transports were eligible for evaluation. Data were collected by means of a comprehensive form filled by a physician at the receiving hospital.
Results: The physicians who gave the decisions for the transports were pediatricians in 60%, general physicians in 15.4%, and residents in 6%, while no identification existed in 159 transports (18.6%). The receiving hospitals were not notified prior to the transport in 79.3%. Pretransport information about the patients were adequate in 26.1% and inadequate in 31.8%; no information was available in 42.1%. Ambulances were used in 64.4% of the transports, of which only 16.2% was fully equipped. Unqualified or inexperienced personnel were in charge in 42.8% of the transports. In 26.3% of the transports, the patients arrived at the receiving hospital in an agonized state.
Conclusion: It appears that there are no established guidelines for the emergency transport of pediatric children in Turkey.
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Postgrad Med J
January 2025
Department of Pediatric Metabolic Diseases, University of Health Sciences, Ankara Etlik City Hospital, Ankara 06170, Turkey.
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Department of Neurology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, United States.
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